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AM EDI TION | FREE SUBSCRIBE HTTP://WWW.INDAILY.COM.AU NEWS IN BREIF Cruise passengers wait for swine flu tests Seventeen South Australians are waiting aboard P&O’s Pacific Dawn for test results for swine flu. Swine flu tests on three members aboard the Pacific Dawn - which has been stopped off Queensland with 2,500 passengers aboard - are expected today. The passengers will be kept on board the luxury liner until authorities confirm whether three sick crew members the disease. The three have tested positive to influenza and swabs have been taken to see if they have the A(H1N1) strain. Astronauts blast off Three astronauts from Canada, Belgium and Russia, blasted off yesterday for the International Space Station in a landmark mission that will double its crew to six for the first time. Belgian Frank De Winne, Canadian Robert Thirsk and Russian Roman Romanenko lifted off from the Baikonur cosmodrome aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket. “The sun -- yes, we can see it,” Romanenko said by radio from the rocket, a doll representing his favourite Russian cartoon character hanging nearby as a talisman. Stimulus package paid Australia has recorded 67 confirmed cases of human swine flu influenza, four in SA. to dead people The $40 million paid to dead people and expats living overseas as part of the Rudd Government’s stimulus package is only a fraction of the billions paid out as tax bonuses, Small Business Minister Craig Emerson says. Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop The guys from theonion.com with another fractured news fable. Click here for the story Wide fi rebreaks to protect Great Ocean Road towns Towns along the Great Ocean Road could soon be buffered by 40-metre firebreaks - twice the normal width - under plans being pushed by the Victorian Government in the aftermath of the Black Saturday disaster. The breaks would be cut into the countryside around seven of Victoria’s most popular holiday towns: Lorne, Anglesea, Kennett River, Wye River, Aireys Inlet, Fairhaven and Moggs Creek. Fairhaven and Aireys Inlet were among towns devastated in the 1983 Ash Wednesday fires. The proposal, detailed in an application submitted to the Federal Government yesterday, comes after bushfire reconstruction chief Christine Nixon said the Great Ocean Road lacked adequate fire protection. Up to 70 kilometres of the buffers would be on public land. The application also seeks a further 124 kilometres of smaller breaks of up to 20 metres width on existing roads and tracks around the nearby Otway Ranges, considered among Victoria’s highest-risk fire zones. The works would largely take place in the Great Otway National Park and the Otway Forest Park. Commonwealth approval is needed because the region is home to endangered species such as the southern brown bandicoot and the long- nosed potoroo. The State Government wants to start work within months. - FAIRFAX